Ex parte Bibb

44 Ala. 140
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 Ala. 140 (Ex parte Bibb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Bibb, 44 Ala. 140 (Ala. 1870).

Opinions

PETERS, J.

The facts upon which the determination of this case depends, are these :

On the 3d day of May, 1861, Howell Rose brought suit against J. F. Jackson, Thomas J. Judge, William O. Bibb, and Benajah S. Bibb, in a court styled in the record, the circuit court, in the county of Montgomery, in the State of Alabama. This suit purports to have been instituted for the recovery of twenty-five thousand dollars, due and owing on a bill of exchange, drawn by the above defendants and accepted by Thomas H. Watts and William H. Rives, and dated March 27th, 1860, and payable twenty months after date thereof to Howell Rose, the plaintiff. Protest and notice are waived on the face of the bill, and it was payable at the office of Benjamin Trimble, in Wetumpka, Alabama. Interest and damages are claimed in the complaint, and it is alleged that “ the same not being paid at maturity, was duly protested, of which said defendants had due notice.” This cause was tried before the Hon. Nat. Cook, judge presiding, on the 19th day of November, 1861, and “of the independence of the Confederate States the first year,” when the suit was discontinued as to Judge, who had not been served with process, and judgment was taken against the other defendants for the sum of $27,-609.65, the demand in the complaint mentioned, together with costs of suit.

Afterwards, on October 29th,.1868, the said Benajah S. Bibb and William C. Bibb moved in the circuit court of the county of Montgomery, in this State, in the office of which court the record of said judgment is found, for a new trial in said cause'; the said Jackson having died after the rendition of said judgment, and before the making of said motion. This motion was regularly continued in said court in which it was made until December 2d, 1868, when it was heard and refused. On the trial of this motion, a bill of exceptions was signed by the presiding judge, from which [151]*151it appears that the applicants for new trial offered evidence tending to show that the bill of exchange, on which the original judgment was founded, was a transaction for the borrowing of money; that only the sum of $23,000 was paid for said bill of exchange; that said Benajah S. Bibb and William. C. Bibb were only accommodation drawers of the same. It also appeared that the judgment sought to be opened for new trial was one rendered in a court of the rebel government, set up in the State of Alabama after the 11th day of January, 1861; and that Benajah S. Bibb was a Union man, and resisted the insurrectionary movement for a separation of this’State from the Union up to the passage of the ordinance of secession, but after that he acquiesced in the action of the convention of the 7th of January, 1861, by which that ordinance was passed, and submitted to the rule of the insurrectionary government which that convention erected in this State, and aided in its support.

Upon this showing application is now made to this court for a rule nisi for mandamus to the circuit court, to compel that court to grant a new trial in said cause.

This application here renders it necessary to consider the effect of the ordinance No. 36 of the convention of the 5th of November, 1867, entitled “ An ordinance to declare void certain judgments, and to grant new trials in certain cases therein mentioned,” passed December 6th, 1867; and the act of the general assembly, entitled “ An act to extend the time in which to open judgments and grant new trials in certain cases,” approved October 10th, 1868.— Pamphlet Acts 1868, pp. 186, 259.

There can not, now, certainly be any doubts as to the power of the legislative department of the government to pass a law authorizing the opening of judgments and the grant of new trials. This has been an authority uniformly exercised by the government of the State from its commencement, and has never, so far as I know, been seriously, questioned. — Akin’s Dig. p. 283, § 135; Clay’s Dig. 340, § 150; Code, § 2407, 2408; Pamphlet Acts, 1857-1858, p. 39, No. 39; Revised Code, §§ 2813, 2814, 2825, 2827; Ex parte Norton & Shields, January term, 1870.

[152]*152The convention of the 12th of September, 1865, seem to have entertained no scruples nor doubt on this right of the legislative branch of the government. This ordinance is almost in the very words of the ordinance No. 36 above referred to. — Revised Code, pp. 58, 59, No. 26, § 1. This power is one without any constitutional restriction. — Calder v. Bull, 3 Dall. 386; Crawford v. Br. Bank Ala., 7 How. 279.

A new trial is a part of the remedy, and it has existed from the earliest times, and over this branch of practice the legislature of the State, unless the State constitution limits its authority, has the amplest power. — 2 Bouvr. L. D., new trial, p. 210 ; 1 Sellor’s Pr. (1813) p. 463; Sturges v. Crowningshield, 4 Whea. 122, 200. The granting of a new trial does not impair the obligation of a contract on which the judgment may be founded; if it did, no new trial could ever be granted. But this is contradicted by the practice of the States, and sanctioned by the highest judicial tribunal of the nation. — Ball. & Susq. R. R. Co. v. Nesbit, 10 Howard, 395. The ordinance No. 30, above cited, which is affirmed and adopted by the act of the general assembly, also above cited, does not grant the new trial as was done in Calder v. Bull, supra; but it commands that it shall be done, if the application is made to the proper court in the manner and time directed in the act and ordinance. In the case at bar this has been done.

Controlled by the authority above referred to, I have no doubt of the constitutionality of the ordinance No. 36, and the act of the legislature confirming and adopting it. Both are wholly free from all constitutional objections, so far as the allowance of new trials is involved.

It remains, then, to inquire whether the facts submitted to the court below were sufficient to justify the opening of the judgment and the grant of a new trial.

In the- first place, the judgment is that of an illegal court. The clerk who issued the writ, the sheriff who served it, and the judge who gave the judgment, so far as this court can know, were all mere usurpers, who did not hold their offices by color of any rightful authority. The court was not that of a State of the Union, and the government of [153]*153which it formed a part, was not that of a State of the Union. The judge who presided in it was not a judicial officer, recognized in this court, or by the rightful government. — Chisholm v. Coleman, January term, 1869. The government and the court in which this judgment is presumed to have been rendered was a foreign affair. — Scott v. Jones, 5 How. 343, 377. No such foreign court could be rightfully set up in this State. There was no law or treaty to authorize it. No citizen of this State was bound, inlaw, to answer to its summons or plead to its process. For the reasons above shown, it was wholly destitute of any authority as a legal court.— Glass v. Schooner Betsey, 3 Dall. 6; 10 Bac. Abr. p. 374, verb void; 3 Blackstone’s Com. 24, 25. The whole proceeding was utterly void, as though it had never taken place, unless validity is given to it as a decree of a court of a government illegally and unconstitutionally erected in a State of the'Union.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Ala. 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-bibb-ala-1870.